Publication | Open Access
Dimerization mediated through a leucine zipper activates the oncogenic potential of the met receptor tyrosine kinase.
190
Citations
65
References
1993
Year
Signal TransductionOncogenic ActivationSignaling PathwayMedicineNatural SciencesReceptor Tyrosine KinaseLeucine ZipperReceptor (Biochemistry)Molecular BiologyOncogenic PotentialLeucine Zipper MotifCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMolecular DockingCell BiologyCell Signaling
Oncogenic activation of the met (hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor) receptor tyrosine kinase involves a genomic rearrangement that generates a hybrid protein containing tpr-encoded sequences at its amino terminus fused directly to the met-encoded receptor kinase domain. Deletion of Tpr sequences abolishes the transforming ability of this protein, implicating this region in oncogenic activation. We demonstrate, by site-directed mutagenesis and coimmunoprecipitation experiments, that a leucine zipper motif within Tpr mediates dimerization of the tpr-met product and is essential for the transforming activity of the met oncogene. By analogy with ligand-stimulated activation of receptor tyrosine kinases, we propose that constitutive dimerization mediated by a leucine zipper motif within Tpr is responsible for oncogenic activation of the Met kinase. The possibility that this mechanism of activation represents a paradigm for a class of receptor tyrosine kinase oncogenes activated by DNA rearrangement is discussed.
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